Is this fish Primal or not?

I am working my way into the Primal lifestyle. Finding good fish seems to be a problem for me. I found this Wild Alaskan fish burger at Costco (frozen) and thought it was pretty safe. Ran the ingredients by some Primal BFF's and got a lot of mixed reaction. So we thought it would be a good question to ask the real experts!!

If the Salmon burgers are 98% fish and water..... then is it considered highly processed and not to be used in my Primal food plan?? And what about the "proclaimed" 1,360mg Omega-3's? I assume the canola oil is used as a binder. Does the 80/20 rule apply here?

Mention Soybean or canola oil and it gets tossed back in the freezer it was displayed in. Just buy canned salmon and make your own salmon patties(I use shredded cocnut as a binder/dryer) and fry in coconut oil or lard.

Mention Soybean or canola oil and it gets tossed back in the freezer it was displayed in. Just buy canned salmon and make your own salmon patties(I use shredded cocnut as a binder/dryer) and fry in coconut oil or lard.

Farmed salmon, because if it was wild-caught, they'd boast about it. Soybean and canola oils are not healthy oils and should be avoided, even if eaten unheated. Pan-frying turns them into toxic trans-fats. Natural flavor = MSG. Natural smoke flavor, natural flavor = ? Color added, why?

Overly processed and unhealthy. Not food, IMO.

I think you missed this part
"I found this Wild Alaskan fish burger at Costco (frozen)"

Otherwise I'd agree they are far from ideal, especially once I noticed the "parfried in soybean and/or canola oil" snuck in at the end

A frozen salmon fillet works as a "burger" quite nicely, and without all that extra crap
If you watch weekly sales it's possible to get 1lb of fillets for the same price per serving as those costco burgers

It's not primal, but you can use your 20% here if you want. Primal=one ingredient. (unless you make it yourself)

I completely disagree with your definition - I can buy mixed veggies at the supermarket, or any number of other things that are multi-ingedient, but perfectly reasonable choices. Is that box of cereal primal? No. Is that sauce where the only ingredients are tomatoes, water, peppers, and garlic primal? Close enough for anyone that's not looking to pick bones.

However, I do agree regarding this particular food: "parfried in canola/soybean oil" definitely isn't primal, nor are "spice", "color added", and "natural smoke flavor". Though practically, you could do a lot worse, too.